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Venezuela's March Oil Exports Rise on More Supertankers, Chevron Cargoes

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

April 4, 2023

©Carabay/AdobeStock

©Carabay/AdobeStock

Venezuela's oil exports rose in March to the highest monthly average since August, boosted by a resumption of loadings after an export freeze and by rising cargoes assigned to Chevron Corp, according to documents and shipping data.

State oil company PDVSA has reinstated two export contracts after a January freeze by new boss Pedro Tellechea: a medium-term contract with Hangzhou Energy, and another with Portugal-based Adinius Sociedade de Servicios, the documents showed. 

Those two customers accounted for a large portion of exports, a sign that PDVSA is consolidating contracts it had with dozens of little-known firms responsible for the loss of billions of dollars from failed payments into fewer agreements.

Oil swap deals with Chevron, Cuba's state company Cubametales and Iran's Naftiran Intertrade Co (NICO) - and most exports of oil byproducts - have continued flowing without interruption during the freeze.

PDVSA and its joint ventures in March shipped a total of 774,420 barrels per day (bpd) of crude and fuel, mainly to China, a rebound from the low figures registered in the two previous months, the documents and data showed. 

A total of eight very large crude carriers (VLCC) set sail from Venezuelan ports, which eased a tanker bottleneck that had built up since early 2023.

Chevron received from PDVSA and exported about 115,000 bpd of Venezuelan heavy crude to the United States, an increase from about 80,000 bpd in February.

PDVSA and Venezuela's oil ministry did not reply to a request for comment. Hangzhou Energy and Adinius Sociedade de Servicios could not be reached for comment.

Venezuela also exported in March 276,000 metric tonnes of oil byproducts, a decrease from the 347,000 tonnes of the previous month and from 727,000 tonnes in January, as shipments of petroleum coke declined. 

As part of an extended audit of its accounts receivable and supply contracts, PDVSA is reviewing accounts of Geneva-based firm Maroil Trading, owned by Venezuelan shipping magnate Wilmer Ruperti, over outstanding debts from petroleum coke supply. Ruperti last week said the situation "was resolved."

All PDVSA's contract revisions are part of a widespread anti-corruption probe that has resulted in the arrest of more than 40 officials and businessmen  according to the Venezuelan attorney general's office. Powerful oil minister Tareck El Aissami resigned last month amid the investigation.

Venezuelan oil exports recovered as more supertankers departedhttps://tmsnrt.rs/40VF7c3

GRAPHIC-Venezuela's monthly oil exports https://graphics.reuters.com/VENEZUELA-OIL/EXPORTS/nmovaxqarpa/

(Reuters - Reporting by Marianna Parraga in Houston, and Mircely Guanipa in Punto fijo, Venezuela; editing by Jonathan Oatis)

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